Other Manufacturing Businesses for Sale
The equipment list and facility are obvious, but the real value tends to live in the customer relationships, the skilled workforce, and the certifications that took years to earn and that competitors can't replicate overnight.
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Featured Other Manufacturing Businesses
Showing 25 of 105 listings
Wound Treatment Device Manufacturer
Paper Products Business
Aerospace Parts Supplier
Blood Testing Equipment Manufacturer
Packaging Company
Granite Countertop Fabricator & Installer
Epoxy Manufacturer and Distributor
Vineyard & Olive Mill
Crating & Packaging Company
Custom-Engineered Solutions to Improve Indoor Air Quality and Mitigate Odor
Industrial Component Manufacturing Business
High-End Kitchen Millwork / Cabinetry Business
Specialty Bed Retailer
Specialized Food Manufacturing Company
Wall Panel Manufacturer
Pet / Hunting Supply Business
Food provider
Vitamins / Supplements Business
Commercial Bakery & Wholesaler
Proprietary Traffic Safety Equipment Manufacturer
Calibration and Testing Laboratory
Indiana Limestone Company
Precision Manufacturing / CNC Business
Industrial Coating and Surface Finishing Company
Midstream & Automated Valves Supplier
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Due diligence
What to Look For
Practical guidance from hundreds of real acquisition conversations.
Customer Mix and Order Stability
- Ask for a customer list showing top accounts, how long each has been active, and what their ordering pattern looks like.
- Manufacturing businesses with scheduled purchase orders, repeat production runs, and customers spread across several industries are far more stable than shops dependent on a single large customer or lumpy project work.
- Revenue spread across automotive, aerospace, defense, and industrial clients means a slowdown in one sector doesn't hurt the whole business.
- Ask how long the top three customers have been ordering and whether any are on formal supply agreements.
Equipment Condition and Capabilities
- Ask for a full equipment list with age, maintenance history, and hours on major machines.
- Condition matters more than age — a well-maintained older CNC with documented service records is more valuable than a newer machine with no history.
- In-house capabilities like heat treatment, precision grinding, or in-house design protect margins and keep customers from going elsewhere.
Quality Certifications
- Ask for current audit records, renewal dates, and the steps required after a change of ownership.
- Certifications like ISO 9001, AS9100, IATF 16949, and ISO 13485 take years and real investment to earn.
- For buyers looking to serve aerospace, automotive, defense, or medical customers, acquiring a business that already holds these certifications means you skip that multi-year process of earning them from scratch.
Workforce Stability and Documentation
- Ask which people are critical and what their plans are post-sale.
- Skilled machinists, welders, and production leads are among the hardest roles to fill in any market.
- A shop manager who handles daily production and quoting without the owner is what separates a business that transfers smoothly from one that doesn't.
Intellectual Property and Formulas
- Ask what the company owns outright and how that IP is protected and transferable.
- Proprietary product designs, chemical formulas, or patented processes assigned to the company can be as valuable as the equipment itself.
- For electronics manufacturers, chemical companies, and textile businesses with licensed agreements, this is one of the most important early diligence questions.
Valuation
What Should You Expect to Pay?
2x-5x
SDE
Owner-operated, equipment-heavy, no certifications
4x-8x
EBITDA
Quality certifications, experienced team, diversified customer base
The spread reflects equipment condition and capital needs, the presence of certifications and proprietary capabilities, how diversified the customer base is, and whether the business runs without the owner on the shop floor every day.
What drives a premium
Active quality certifications like ISO, AS9100, IATF 16949, or ISO 13485 that transfer with the business
Customers across multiple industries with multi-year purchase order history and no single account above 15-20% of revenue
Experienced shop floor team with documented processes and a manager who runs production independently
Proprietary designs, formulas, or in-house capabilities that competitors cannot quickly replicate
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FAQ
Other Manufacturing Business Acquisition
What should I look for when buying a manufacturing business?
Start with the customer mix. Businesses with repeat orders from customers spread across multiple industries are more stable than shops dependent on one large account or one-off project work. Then look at equipment condition, certifications, and workforce stability. The most transferable manufacturing businesses have an experienced shop team with documented processes, quality certifications in good standing, and customers who have been ordering for years. Browse manufacturing businesses for sale on Rejigg to see what's available.
How much does a manufacturing business cost?
Most manufacturing businesses sell for 2 to 8 times annual profit. Businesses with strong quality certifications, experienced workforces, diverse customer bases, and proprietary capabilities tend to command higher multiples. Capital-intensive operations with aging equipment or significant upcoming replacement costs effectively require buyers to adjust their offers accordingly. Use the SBA loan calculator to model how SBA financing might look at different deal sizes.
How do I evaluate a manufacturing business before buying?
Ask for three years of financials with revenue broken out by customer and product type. Request a full equipment list with maintenance records and hours. Walk the facility with the shop manager and ask about upcoming capital needs. Get a list of active certifications and quality audit records. Ask who the top customers are, how long they have been ordering, and whether the business is on their approved vendor lists. Then ask which employees are critical and what their plans are.
What due diligence questions should I ask about a manufacturing business?
Ask: What is the customer concentration, and how long have the top accounts been active? What certifications does the business hold, and what steps are required to transfer them? What is the condition of the major equipment, and what are the expected capital needs over the next three years? Does the business own any proprietary designs, formulas, or processes? Who manages production and quoting without the owner, and do they plan to stay? Are there any environmental issues with the facility?
Where can I find manufacturing businesses for sale?
Rejigg connects buyers directly with manufacturing business owners. You can browse manufacturing businesses for sale on Rejigg, message owners, and access financials and equipment documentation without going through a broker.
How do quality certifications affect the value of a manufacturing business?
Certifications like AS9100, IATF 16949, and ISO 13485 are often prerequisites for selling to aerospace, automotive, and medical device customers. They take years and significant investment to earn, so a business that already holds them is worth meaningfully more to a buyer who wants to serve those customers. The key is confirming the certifications are current, that audit records are clean, and understanding what notification or follow-up steps are required after ownership changes.
Can I get SBA financing to buy a manufacturing business?
Yes. Manufacturing businesses with documented cash flow, stable customer bases, and identifiable collateral in the form of equipment and real property generally qualify for SBA 7(a) loans. Lenders will look closely at customer concentration and upcoming capital expenditure needs. Use the SBA loan calculator to model monthly payments at different deal sizes.